Ian Fisher: Tribute to a Seattle rock star

Friends, fans, fellow musicians and ’80s scenesters gathered for a noisy tribute to the former Cowboys frontman, who died in late October while living in Thailand. (Check out our video of the opening remarks by Seattle radio veteran Stephen Rabow and Fisher’s brother, Pepper Fisher, below.) Attendees are also posting comments on the Cowboys’ Web site.

The event was like a big, boisterous high school reunion for Seattle’s rock scene of the late ’70s and early ’80s. Despite sadness over the loss of one of the city’s most flamboyant rock singers, the mood was buoyant and celebratory. Many reconnected with friends from the heady days of Seattle’s power-pop scene.

“It’s a beautiful thing,” said guitarist Ernie Sapiro, who traveled from Denver to attend the tribute and play with other former Cowboys as well as musical guests from other bands.

“It’s surreal. He was like a brother,” Sapiro added wistfully.

People described Fisher as “one of a kind,” “a beautiful spirit” and “a real gentleman.”

Many acknowledged that a Nov. 2 Big Blog post about Fisher’s passing had helped friends, fans, family members and fellow musicians reconnect with each other and organize a tribute just a few weeks after his death.

The evening included opening remarks by Seattle radio veteran Stephen Rabow (who flew in from Florida) and Fisher’s brother, Pepper Fisher; a 15-minute video of Fisher’s life and career (created by Krys Lilly, wife of Keith Lilly of The Heats), and a raucous, 20-song set featuring such songs as “Girls Like That,” “Standing in the Rain,” “Jet City Rockers” and “Roll ‘n’ Roll Cowboy,” one of The Cowboys’ signature songs.

“Ian wouldn’t have wanted a moment of silence,” Rabow said before leading a cheer.

The Cowboys, who broke up in the mid-’80s, laid a foundation for the grunge explosion that followed in the late ’80s. The band, along with other power-pop groups of the late ’70s and early ’80s, convinced club owners that their original songs — and not just popular cover songs — could draw large crowds.

The video included footage from a 1997 Cowboys reunion show at “A Pain in the Grass ,” a summer concert series at the Seattle Center Mural Amphitheatre.

“Pain in the Grass” producer Jeff Gilbert, who was among the more than 300 people crammed into the Tractor, recalled working hard to make the reunion happen.

“You’re not going to make me do this, are you?” Fisher told Gilbert. But when other band members agreed to do the show, Fisher was completely behind it.

“He was a good sport,” Gilbert said.

In other video footage, Michael Stein of Seattle’s Chuckie-Boy Records (the Cowboys label) said, “Ian, you’re singing lead vocals in a great band in the sky.”

The Presidents’ Dave Dederer, who was one of the performers, had been a fan of the Cowboys when he was a teenager. He quipped that he had to prove to the doorman that he was old enough to attend the show.

It was amazing how well the Cowboys songs have held up — and how good the band and its guests sounded. The tribute band included Dederer, Saprio, Jack Hanan, Jeff Cerar (now living in Los Angeles), Don Kellerman, Marty Waychoff, Paul Brownlow and Mark Guenther, as well as singers Rick Smith (of the Lonesome City Kings), Steve Pearson (The Heats, Rangehoods) and Jim Basnight (The Moberlys, Jim Basnight Band). (Joey Reid took over production on a chaotic night.)

Smith, who lives in Austin, Texas, and has worked with Jimmie Dale Gilmore and Don Walser, capably handled most of vocals and brought a fiery enthusiasm to the show that recalled Fisher’s unforgettable performances.